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  <description>I
  
  grew up hearing stories about how one of 
              my ancestors arrived on the Mayflower. I also knew my father&amp;rsquo;s 
              family of English and Welsh immigrants were among the original Mormon 
              pioneers to the Salt Lake Valley. Some of them later married Irish 
              immigrants and raised families in Utah and California. Then there 
              were the greatgreat-grandparents who emigrated from Sweden to Minnesota 
              in the 1890s. Myself, I am a California native of no particular 
              religious bent who has lived in Illinois, Michigan, New York, Texas, 
              and Oregon. When I was younger I married an Iranian living in the 
              United States on a student visa. I have a brother whose girlfriend 
              is from China, living in the United States on a work visa. Another 
              brother married a woman whose long family lineage in California&amp;rsquo;s 
              central valley includes Native American ancestry.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  Our family story is an American story, not unlike countless other 
              American stories. It is a family history of hopes for a better life, 
              of uprooted lives and new, unfamiliar landscapes, of years of hard 
              work and confrontations with adversity and discrimination. It is 
              the story of a Swedish great-grandfather who came to this country 
              in the 1890s as a farmhand, working his way up to an accountant&amp;rsquo;s 
              position with a Minneapolis home heating company. In the bleak Depression 
              era winter of 1931-32, he faced arrest when his employer discovered 
              he had arranged for off-the-books coal deliveries to families who 
              could no longer pay. Distraught, he killed himself. It is also the 
              story of my father, a man with an entrepreneurial spirit whose life 
              was marked by continual success in business. It is the story of 
              other generations who have walked many paths in life. It is an immigrant&amp;rsquo;s 
              story.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  The immigrant experience in the U.S. was never just a glorious tale. 
              But in the United States today the darker side of the immigration 
              story is repeating itself. President Bush has apparently been advised 
              that leadership on the immigration issue means being pro-active, 
              which is another way of saying send in the troops. The White House 
              Deciderator&amp;rsquo;s latest stab at deciding something involves plans 
              to significantly increase the presence of National Guard troops 
              along the southwestern border. Hearing this latest news I can&amp;rsquo;t 
              help but wonder if the Guard troops will be checking the papers 
              of corporate executives from the United States who are shipping 
              good-paying American jobs to northern Mexico where the plants they 
              operate pay subsistence-level wages. Where I live in Bloomington, 
              Illinois the local newspaper reports that the General Electric plant 
              is laying off another 56 workers and their jobs are being moved 
              to Apodaca, Mexico and Vega Alta, Puerto Rico. So far I haven&amp;rsquo;t 
              noted any protest by local or state politicians otherwise known 
              for their concerns over the influx of &amp;ldquo;illegals.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  Immigrants have once again become the target of xenophobic voices 
              who seek to blame the reported 12 million &amp;ldquo;illegals&amp;rdquo; for 
              every evil under the sun, taking jobs and draining social services. 
              In the spirit of the Anti-Exclusion Act of 1882, which sought to 
              keep Chinese &amp;ldquo;coolies&amp;rdquo; from U.S. shores, the House of 
              Representatives bill passed last December, under the sponsorship 
              of Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-WI), would transform millions of 
              undocumented families into criminal felon families. With visions 
              of building the &amp;ldquo;Great Wall of the Southwest,&amp;rdquo; the bill&amp;rsquo;s 
              flair for the police state is embellished by a provision that criminalizes 
              anyone who provides assistance to undocumented workers.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  Unfortunately, the Senate&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;compromise&amp;rdquo; bill sponsored 
              by Senators Kennedy (D-MA) and McCain (R-AZ) constitutes a compromise 
              only in the justice it also denies to immigrant workers. The bill 
              proposes stepped-up border enforcement measures, but no border wall 
              with Mexico. It would raise the wall of second-class status for 
              immigrants consigned to labor&amp;rsquo;s bargain basement in a greatly 
              expanded &amp;ldquo;guest workers&amp;rdquo; program. This proposed ten-year 
              guest worker system represents another way to permanently structure 
              a large, two-tier workforce into the U.S. economy, as the AFL-CIO&amp;rsquo;s 
              executive council recently charged. The result can only lead to 
              a further deterioration in the quality of the job market, as once 
              decent-paying, permanent jobs continue to be transformed into temporary, 
              benefit-starved jobs employing foreign &amp;ldquo;guests&amp;rdquo; who will 
              be inherently more vulnerable to employer abuse.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  
  
 
 
 
 
  The 
              folks in Congress likely assumed they could tighten the immigration 
              knot without worrying about what those directly affected by more 
              restrictive legislation thought about all this. They were mistaken. 
              In a display of grassroots activism as unprecedented as it is understandable, 
              immigrants responded. Mass protest marches involving millions have 
              made it clear that immigrants want what everyone else wants&amp;mdash;equality.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  
   The mass marches had the effect of a depth charge on the narrow 
              liberal-conservative debate over immigration. The sea of humanity 
              in the streets from coast to coast conveyed with a previously unseen 
              force the human dimension of the immigration issue. You could see 
              it in the eyes of the marchers. You could hear it in their chants. 
              You could read it on the banners and signs. This was a pageant of 
              humanity gone to extraordinary lengths for their aspirations for 
              fair play and a better life.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Equality now translates first into amnesty for those illegal workers 
              and their families who are working in the United States. Equality 
              now also demands that any Congressional legislation that increases 
              the hardships of immigrant workers and the undocumented be rejected. 
              Instead of focusing on new enforcement provisions against employers 
              who hire undocumented workers, public energy would be far better 
              spent targeting the exploitation of these workers. Is it right that 
              &amp;ldquo;illegal&amp;rdquo; workers who contribute to the legal profits 
              of thousands of companies live without equal employment law protections?&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Indeed, the questions we can ask about the plight of immigrants 
              quickly become questions we can ask about all working Americans. 
              Is it right that the minimum wage in 2006 fails to translate into 
              even a close approximation of a living wage? Is it right that full-time 
              work in this country does not guarantee a life out of poverty? U.S. 
              citizens express growing concern over the Bush administration&amp;rsquo;s 
              encroachments on civil liberties under the guise of a &amp;ldquo;war 
              on terror.&amp;rdquo; Rightly so. They should also be concerned that 
              the U.S. Supreme Court in 2003 declared that even legal immigrants 
              convicted of a crime can be subject to indefinite detention.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Isn&amp;rsquo;t it obvious that the fate of U.S. workers are linked to 
              what happens to our immigrant brothers and sisters who work in this 
              country&amp;rsquo;s poorest, most exploited jobs. The current economy 
              is a hardship economy for tens of millions worried about broken 
              pension plans, unaffordable health care, and too many damn jobs 
              with too little pay.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   It&amp;rsquo;s encouraging at least that the AFL-CIO&amp;rsquo;s current position 
              on immigration rights rejects scapegoating foreign workers. Its 
              March 1 executive council called for reforms to provide a path to 
              permanent residency for currently undocumented workers. Their reasoning 
              is simple&amp;mdash;and right: &amp;ldquo;The broken immigration system has 
              allowed employers to create an underclass of workers, which has 
              effectively reduced working standards for all workers.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 


 
  
  
 
 
 
 
  In 
              Mexico, of course, the situation is more dire. The impact of NAFTA 
              has flooded the country in recent years with cheap, subsidized U.S. 
              corn, forcing some two million Mexican farmers into poverty and 
              ruin. Wages in Mexican industry have also fallen precipitously. 
              Many Mexican immigrants who come to the United States are victims 
              of these unjust corporate trade policies. We should ask ourselves: 
              &amp;ldquo;Why should they be punished for trying to survive?&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  
   Yet this is exactly the blamethe-victim logic of a national political 
              debate that fundamentally views immigrants&amp;mdash;not corporate policies 
              &amp;mdash;as &amp;ldquo;the problem.&amp;rdquo; Predictably, the upswing of activism 
              in defense of immigrant rights is also sparking some public backlash. 
              Typical of such sentiment is the recent letter writer to the
   
    Chicago 
              Tribune
   
   who finds herself &amp;ldquo;appalled at the nerve of illegal 
              immigrants and their friends marching in our streets demanding and 
              threatening that we reward them for breaking our laws.&amp;rdquo; It&amp;rsquo;s 
              unknown whether this letter writer from the upscale Chicago suburb 
              of Lake Barrington has also taken up with her local municipality 
              the issue of the undocumented workers who undoubtedly maintain the 
              landscapes of many of that towns long driveways and expansive lawns.
   
    &amp;nbsp;
   
  
 
 
  
   The irrationality of such anti-immigrant sentiment is evident in 
              the ways immigrants are attacked for both working and not working. 
              They&amp;rsquo;re portrayed to suit convenience as either lawless stealers 
              of jobs or as outsiders living off our public services. It&amp;rsquo;s 
              a picture that demonizes the plight of millions of human beings 
              whose aspirations and concerns are not that different from the average 
              citizen. In fact, more than 90 percent of undocumented men work, 
              according to a 2005 Urban Institute report. That&amp;rsquo;s a rate higher 
              than that for U.S. citizens or legal immigrants. Yet this group 
              is ineligible for welfare, food stamps, and Medicaid. They do pay 
              taxes, however. Undocumented immigrants also contribute to the costs 
              of state and local education in real estate taxes included in rents. 
              Additionally, three-quarters of undocumented workers pay social 
              security taxes, the benefits of which will elude them.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   What&amp;rsquo;s great now about the action in the streets is that immigrant 
              communities are finally emerging from these exploited shadows, discovering 
              in their own solidarity a newfound voice where once they were ignored. 
              The dynamic of the current moment speaks to the potential of this 
              new civil rights movement to spill over into a broader activism 
              in defense of labor rights. That&amp;rsquo;s good news for everyone who 
              works for a living in the United States.
  
  
   &amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
 
  
   
    Mark 
            T. Harris is a freelance writer living in Bloomington, Illinois.&amp;nbsp;</description>
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  <short-title>Xenophobia</short-title>
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  <title>Immigrants Are Not the Enemy</title>
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